Ars Technica - All content 13小时前
Ars spoke with the military’s chief orbital traffic cop—here’s what we learned
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本文讲述了美军将领Raj Agrawal在指挥追踪近5万太空物体期间,如何辨别他国卫星是否构成军事威胁,并强调太空安全的重要性。

For two years, Col. Raj Agrawal commanded the US military unit responsible for tracking nearly 50,000 human-made objects whipping through space. In this role, he was keeper of the orbital catalog and led teams tasked with discerning whether other countries' satellites, mainly China and Russia, are peaceful or present a military threat to US forces.

This job is becoming more important as the Space Force prepares for the possibility of orbital warfare.

Ars visited with Agrawal in the final weeks of his two-year tour of duty as commander of Mission Delta 2, a military unit at Peterson Space Force Base, Colorado. Mission Delta 2 collects and fuses data from a network of sensors "to identify, characterize, and exploit opportunities and mitigate vulnerabilities" in orbit, according to a Space Force fact sheet.

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美军 太空安全 卫星追踪 军事威胁 太空力量
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